The Hun: World War I Short Film

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  • Опубліковано 8 січ 2018
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    The Hun is a short film drama set in the trenches during the late stages of the First World War. It follows a young American soldier, Private MacDonald, who has just become his company's new message runner. Facing imminent German advances, MacDonald and his brothers in arms mentally prepare for the onslaught. The Hun portrays metaphorical themes in the fog of war through storytelling and myth, which can only amount to the reality; war is hell.
    Written and directed by Marine Corps veteran, Tyler Mendelson, this short film sheds light on a worldwide conflict that is sadly much forgotten, during its one-hundred year anniversary.
    www.tylermendelsonfilm.com
    Filmmaker's Instagram: @tylerdmendelson
    Film Page: thehunshortfilm
    To purchase the official soundtrack, individual songs from the film: mendelfilms.bandcamp.com/albu...
    Portuguese-BR subtitles by: Marcelo Felinto from "A Primeira Grande Guerra"
    / channel
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 3,6 тис.

  • @MendelFilms
    @MendelFilms  5 років тому +2750

    Hi guys, and thank you for watching. In order to avoid repeating myself in the comments in answering questions, I'd like to explain several points that have drawn questions or criticism. And this is not to say that I don't welcome criticism, as I am always looking to improve. But anyway, most people need to remember two main points. 1. This is a student film and 2. Filmmaking is expensive. As a veteran (US Marine Corps) myself, as well as a huge history buff, I ALWAYS strive to represent veterans in the utmost respect and that includes doing my absolute best to attaining as much historical accuracy as possible. I did years worth of research for this project. Hundreds of hours of reading and learning all I could to get as much as I could right. But with that, I do not have the resources and seemingly unlimited budget that filmmakers and studios have in Hollywood productions. This project was done on a very small budget. I raised $23,800 for this myself on Kickstarter ($21,600 of it I was actually able to use after they took their fee out), and you have to understand in trying to make a quality film, production equipment is very expensive to rent. In between the film/lighting equipment, costumes, props, set design, logistics, etc. you have to balance a budget and make tough creative choices by making sure the money gets used where it is absolutely needed. In doing this, I had to take a few liberties, as well as some creative stands in order to tell a story (a fictional one at that.)
    Here are my answers in regards to some of your criticisms/questions:
    Gas masks: I did not put a specific date aside from the year to when this story takes place. I consider it early into 1918, while the AEF was still using the French M2 gas masks before they permanently started using the British SBR.
    Cigarettes: I knew from the get go that filters were not around during the war. My actors are not natural smokers. I tried to find the best available option that would look decent, while respecting their choice to not use tobacco, and went with cocoa cigarettes without tobacco or nicotine. During the purchase, I had hoped that since they are white filtered, it wouldn't stick out as much, but it is clearly difficult to hide to an observant eye with close ups on a 4K camera. It is ultimately a creative choice that I am okay with.
    Rifles: One of the most expensive items/props were firearms. Looking for authentic 1903A1 or 1917 Enfields is both difficult as well as extremely expensive. There was no plausible way with our budget to purchase a number of these, so my next best option was realistic looking 1903A3 airsoft models. There is 1 authentic 1903A1 in the film, carried by the lone reenactor we had on set. It was his own weapon.
    Not a lot of soldiers on screen: With our budget, we had 7 American uniforms to work with. My plan all along had been to cast 15-20 reenactors (all with their own uniforms and gear) to fill the scene, especially to make a longer and more intense battle scene, but only one guy showed up. My contact from the reenactment group did not come through in getting those guys to set, and with only 3 days of production (and equipment rental), we had to make do with what we had.
    Music: The song in the introduction is a popular recruitment song of the era, "Over There", that I had edited to sound distorted and dreamlike, and all other music in the film is original and made specifically for this film. The ending song is called Dear Dove, and is created by a friend of mine using the lyrics to a poem I wrote specifically for this project. The soundtrack is available for purchase here: mendelfilms.bandcamp.com/album/the-hun-film-soundtrack
    Again, thank you for watching and I still love to read your comments and questions!

    • @Dan-n-Duke-jr2ic
      @Dan-n-Duke-jr2ic 5 років тому +57

      Don't beat yourself up to hard, I find that in these trench warfare movies. The most interesting take on it is interpersonal relationships and each mans own coping mechanisms that gets them through each day. It would be easy to fill up an hour and a half of a movie with hand to hand combat and the fog from the shells landing in no mans land. But to capture a private dealing with shellshock, or the acts of "cowardice" the leaders have to deal with while hiding their own hypocritical fantasies are the narratives in which id love to watch! That is where the true art lies, in the dialogue.

    • @ManScoutsofAmerica
      @ManScoutsofAmerica 5 років тому +113

      None of this needed explaining. Great movie for a student film.

    • @tylerthegrimm
      @tylerthegrimm 5 років тому +28

      MendelFilms good stuff. I didn't figure the German to be actual death, I just thought he was some German spirit taking the main guy to the afterlife kinda like a we fought each other but now it's done so let's go together kind of thing.

    • @thinman4648
      @thinman4648 5 років тому +6

      MendelFilms, I don’t want to sound like a jerk but I’m going to tell you my criticisms and and ideas for if you want to make another, the first criticism would be that it’s too clean, the second would be that it’s too quiet and the audio sounds a too clean, the third would be that the actors need to say their lines like they are theirs and not a script ie, it doesn’t sound natural, but enough with that also I have an idea for a video you can do, have some soldiers hiding in a muddy wet shell hole late in the evening after duck when it’s dark just talking and waiting for the next day. I hope this helps!

    • @xxuncexx
      @xxuncexx 5 років тому +26

      Ya did fine. I enjoyed it. Lots of hard work

  • @fly_speck_cafe
    @fly_speck_cafe 2 роки тому +171

    My grandfather was shot and left for dead. A French woman found him, saved his life, and he rejoined his company. She's the reason I'm here.

    • @kontoru22
      @kontoru22 8 місяців тому +5

      He married that french woman or ?

    • @fly_speck_cafe
      @fly_speck_cafe 8 місяців тому +11

      @@kontoru22 Non, Monsieur; he returned home, sired my father, who sired me.

    • @Flo55721
      @Flo55721 8 місяців тому +3

      🥹🫡

    • @kontoru22
      @kontoru22 8 місяців тому +6

      @@fly_speck_cafe i had a completely different experience. My great grandma's first husband get shot in the head during dutch aggression in indonesia, without that dutch sniper i probably wouldnt exist today

    • @fly_speck_cafe
      @fly_speck_cafe 8 місяців тому +2

      @@kontoru22 it's astounding, really, how things work.

  • @johnnicholas1488
    @johnnicholas1488 4 роки тому +1818

    My grandfather lost a lung from a gas attack. Came back home worked hard physical work until he was about 75. I saw him often . I never heard him speak one word about this war or any war.What I knew came from my mother. He was a huge guy with great shoulders and huge hands. The size and power of those huge hands is what impressed me most.
    As a teenager I worked with him mixing mortar in a wheel barrow and shoveling it up to him on a scaffold where he laid heavy cement block. " More mud" he'd yell wheezing spitting chewy tobacco in a very gruff tone, but i knew he was laughing
    to himself. "Mud" is slang for mortar.
    "Those fists" i'd see them thinking to myself that getting hit by one of those fists would be like getting kicked by a horse.
    He was one tough bastard . I understand that for years he was rough drinking brawler type.
    He could read a little having left school in the third grade. By the time I came along the drinking and brawling had passed . He was very jovial in a rough sort of way.
    I worked with him often in my father's little business doing heavy physical work. I still remember
    his hard wheezing when there was heavy tough work. He about 75 and I say about 18. He was stronger than me and had more one lung endurance. I grew up easy. He grew up hard.
    He died at the age of 99 years.
    Now I am about 75.
    He was the KINDEST man I have ever met.
    And now with a tear in myeyes, I wonder if suffering is the crucible in which kindness is forged.

    • @baregrilles5445
      @baregrilles5445 4 роки тому +39

      That's a definite truth. Eugene Sledge was a mortar man in the Marines in the Pacific. He lived through hell. After the war he devoted his life to nature and teaching.

    • @badger_actual8249
      @badger_actual8249 4 роки тому +12

      Sir you are a great writer and that k you for that!!

    • @peggedyourdad9560
      @peggedyourdad9560 4 роки тому +15

      @Luke Colwell You actually can live with only one lung as long as it's still functional. They may not typically be able to engage in as strenuous activities for as long as a normal person with both lungs, but a person can live a relatively normal life with only one lung.

    • @fitchyyboi
      @fitchyyboi 4 роки тому +4

      Incredible story :) did you serve at all yourself?

    • @littlemicogamer1524
      @littlemicogamer1524 4 роки тому +16

      @Luke Colwell STFU

  • @datboimavric1524
    @datboimavric1524 3 роки тому +496

    time traveller from 21st century arrives
    Time traveller: “what year Is it?”
    Ww1 soldier: “1916”
    Time traveller: “oh you mean the middle of World War 1?”
    Ww1 soldier: “world war what now??? “

  • @ryanblue5627
    @ryanblue5627 3 роки тому +212

    “There is no enemy. There is no victory. Only boys who lost their lives in the sand” (Cliffs of Gallipoli by Sabaton).

    • @HybridPhage
      @HybridPhage 2 роки тому +3

      The moment I read the first sentence, I just knew it was sabaton.

    • @arminius301
      @arminius301 Рік тому

      The only enemy that exists is the banking elite who profits from the wars they orchestrate and the blood your sons and daughters will shed in the trenches!

    • @williamtaylor7814
      @williamtaylor7814 7 місяців тому +2

      I am an Australian, and one of the most beautiful things I’ve heard was what Kemal Atatürk said about the Australian lives lost in Gallipoli; “You the mothers who sent their sons from far away countries wipe away your tears. Your sons are now lying in our bosom and are in peace. After having lost their lives on this land they have become our sons as well.". It gives me comfort to know that my people rest in the sands of a friendly people with countless others from all regions of the world.

  • @fetidcreeper
    @fetidcreeper 6 років тому +2652

    and when he gets to heaven,
    to saint peter he will tell:
    "Just another soldier reporting, sir
    I've served my time in hell."

    • @fetidcreeper
      @fetidcreeper 5 років тому +195

      your mother I'm an atheist. It doesn't matter if they are or aren't real. You're missing the point.

    • @kiloechocharlie1342
      @kiloechocharlie1342 5 років тому +48

      @ your mother Thanks for letting us in on that kid. Stay in school.

    • @markmulder9283
      @markmulder9283 5 років тому +19

      your mother COMMUNIST!!!!!!!!!!!! And you don't know anything

    • @robertsettle2590
      @robertsettle2590 5 років тому +10

      @your mother YOU WISH!!!!!

    • @rustyshackleford3263
      @rustyshackleford3263 5 років тому +14

      your mother it’s always the bad people who are atheist to soothe their conscience hoping they won’t have to pay for the bad they did in this life. Guess what we all pay. Eventually.

  • @awsomecfstc4845
    @awsomecfstc4845 5 років тому +3074

    Considering the budget, this was pretty good.

    • @pavelv8468
      @pavelv8468 5 років тому +14

      what was the budget?

    • @Junior-es7mu
      @Junior-es7mu 5 років тому +6

      A couple of million dollars

    • @MendelFilms
      @MendelFilms  5 років тому +109

      It was 21,600. @@Junior-es7mu

    • @_Claire_05
      @_Claire_05 5 років тому +7

      @@samueltatar6377 I know right

    • @Wakeup463
      @Wakeup463 5 років тому +11

      Junior J this nigga said a couple million wasn’t even an hr long you ain’t been seeing no types of money bruh

  • @buddhastaxi666
    @buddhastaxi666 4 роки тому +225

    “I am the enemy you killed, my friend.
    I knew you in this dark: for so you frowned
    Yesterday through me as you jabbed and killed.
    I parried; but my hands were loath and cold.
    Let us sleep now. . . .”
    Wilfred Owen.

    • @dot__8216
      @dot__8216 4 роки тому +3

      mate I live him so much

    • @donna30044
      @donna30044 3 роки тому +5

      "The old lie, Dulce et decorum est Pro patria mori."

    • @johnnicholas1488
      @johnnicholas1488 3 роки тому +5

      " He dropped more sullenly than wearily, lay heavily like meat, and none of us could kick him to his feet...". Wilfred had the right stuff.
      Pity we lost him so early.

    • @nicoc6387
      @nicoc6387 3 роки тому

      Exactly the words that were going through my mind at the end. Powerful stuff.

  • @jiveassturkey8849
    @jiveassturkey8849 4 роки тому +460

    For the relatively short time America was actively involved in the First World War, they saw some of the worst and most intense action in all of American military history. Around 150,000 men killed in a few short months. Only 58,000 Americans were killed in Vietnam for comparison. An American soldier was more likely to be killed in action in WWI than in the Civil War. That statistic is staggering.

    • @mashedbrotato927
      @mashedbrotato927 4 роки тому +9

      Nah, they had "only" roughly 117.000 dead, the rest injured casualties.

    • @dot__8216
      @dot__8216 4 роки тому +35

      ummmm paschendale, le somme, verdun. cant say they had some of the worst. in fact they only came in as germany was weakening

    • @dot__8216
      @dot__8216 4 роки тому +4

      and yeah that's not just Kia that is mia and casualties

    • @jiveassturkey8849
      @jiveassturkey8849 4 роки тому +33

      tom dobs the comment said they saw some of the worst action in AMERICAN history. America wasn’t involved in The Somme or Verdun

    • @jordanelder321
      @jordanelder321 4 роки тому +23

      Jive Ass Turkey I’m not being funny mate, the only area of the front where the US made a considerable impact was drawing up war plans that never saw action and fighting in the ardenne and defending against the Deutsche Frühjahrsoffensive in the spring. The US made nowhere near as big of an impact as Britain, France, Canada or any other of the Commonwealth nation’s.Compared to the French and British sacrifice and effort and what they had to go through,the Americans hardly scratched the surface of the ‘the toughest fighting’

  • @TheWyoCoyote
    @TheWyoCoyote 5 років тому +1458

    My Great Grandfather fought in WW1. He was in the Pennsylvania National Guard and they became part of the AEF. He was a Sgt in a Trench Mortar unit. He lost a lung during an artillery bombardment during the Final Offensive in the fall of 1918. I have his Purple Heart medal.

    • @thetrojanwarrior1467
      @thetrojanwarrior1467 5 років тому +14

      Wow

    • @randomsu25noises911
      @randomsu25noises911 5 років тому +50

      I thank him for his service

    • @CrossOfBayonne
      @CrossOfBayonne 5 років тому +50

      He was a brave and honorable man. May he rest in a better place

    • @Bora-uu6im
      @Bora-uu6im 5 років тому +30

      Wow that's incredible, Rest In Peace

    • @snipinghe5985
      @snipinghe5985 5 років тому +10

      Nice but have a look in USA we thanks soldier for they service in France.... all of my grand grandfather have do the first world war and one die because of gaz but they don t thanks them today....they prefer speak about migrants

  • @peterkolovos3079
    @peterkolovos3079 5 років тому +1069

    The ghost of the German soldier offering him his hand to escort him to the afterlife was very poignant.

    • @mortalclown3812
      @mortalclown3812 4 роки тому +19

      @SuperVHSchannel Curious about your own creative output.

    • @Ballsackschrader911
      @Ballsackschrader911 4 роки тому +31

      SuperVHSchannel fucking clown

    • @Ballsackschrader911
      @Ballsackschrader911 4 роки тому +23

      SuperVHSchannel Brain dead are you?

    • @canadianbacon2693
      @canadianbacon2693 4 роки тому +15

      @SuperVHSchannel piss off, gamer boy.

    • @canadianbacon2693
      @canadianbacon2693 4 роки тому +3

      @SuperVHSchannel I apologize for how I acted, I shall try to conduct myself better in the future.

  • @MackMateCom
    @MackMateCom 4 роки тому +224

    The German soldier is representing the futility of war, all human / different uniforms

    • @neriksen
      @neriksen 2 роки тому

      Separate yourself from the emotional side of it and look at it realistically.
      It’s cyclic, it’s what we do, it’s what we have always done, it’s how man unconsciously controls population.
      Whether you or I like it or not.

    • @DutcherDog
      @DutcherDog 2 роки тому

      No futile to the winning side 🇺🇸 !

    • @aratwhoisaprivate2109
      @aratwhoisaprivate2109 2 роки тому +1

      @@DutcherDog no one won the war we all lost

    • @valkyrie941
      @valkyrie941 2 роки тому

      @@DutcherDog mate shut up they all died for nothing

  • @tyrannosauruszeppelin2205
    @tyrannosauruszeppelin2205 3 роки тому +45

    ''Feels like, no matter what happens, no matter if I make it out of here or not, I'm always going to be in this trench, y''know?'
    That line perfectly captures the horrible things and the scars of war.

    • @toddjohnston1927
      @toddjohnston1927 3 роки тому +1

      Yes, yes it does......wish the fuck I could climb out of it.

    • @peacenow42
      @peacenow42 Рік тому +1

      @@toddjohnston1927 you can do it

  • @WarInHD
    @WarInHD 5 років тому +191

    Now imagine if this guy had a few million dollars, he would’ve made an even more badass film

    • @MendelFilms
      @MendelFilms  5 років тому +34

      If you or someone would offer me 1 million, I will blow you away

    • @aidand.7911
      @aidand.7911 4 роки тому +4

      @@MendelFilms If you had the budget of saving private ryan, could we expect a world war 1 movie as iconic to ww1 as saving private ryan is to ww2? I really want a great ww1 movie that can blow saving private ryan out of the water

    • @MendelFilms
      @MendelFilms  4 роки тому +3

      @@aidand.7911 If I get that kind of budget, absolutely.

    • @reefjoubarani8535
      @reefjoubarani8535 4 роки тому +6

      1917 anyone?

    • @donsjovikfalt6506
      @donsjovikfalt6506 4 роки тому

      @@reefjoubarani8535 ye

  • @rickywatson111
    @rickywatson111 5 років тому +71

    I'm a New Zealander, my great uncle fell at Paschendale. May those from both sides rest in eternal peace. Lest we forget.

    • @coderr_
      @coderr_ 3 роки тому +4

      🇬🇧🇺🇸🇦🇺🇨🇦🇯🇵🇷🇺🇫🇷🇳🇿🇮🇪 we shall never forget them also some other countrys i forgot to include
      Also my great grandmother uncle fought in ww1 as a doughboy and survived 6 battles im pretty sure and i have his medal at home

    • @julianpalmer4886
      @julianpalmer4886 3 роки тому +1

      My Kiwi Whanau weren't spared either Mate. The poor Women/children/retired-invalid tradesmen-warriors, having to see through that

  • @thegunbox81
    @thegunbox81 4 роки тому +216

    This was really good I thoroughly enjoyed it the ending was impressive in the manner in which it was done. These 15-20 minute short films that I'm seeing on UA-cam are far better than the big Hollywood war movies

    • @jannikheidrich2035
      @jannikheidrich2035 3 роки тому +4

      Rather than talking about fictional character and fictional worlds these short films often present the tragic of real events and would be an awesome conversation starter🤔
      Like in this film understanding which effects certain events/ideologies/problems in society can have, by learning from the past rather than dream a clean future without failure and suffering, without seeing the obvious shortcomings.

    • @marcelopepinho
      @marcelopepinho 2 роки тому

      Couldn't agree more

    • @jerrygil1965
      @jerrygil1965 2 роки тому +1

      Amen

    • @locarnese5598
      @locarnese5598 Рік тому

      What my dog drops on the sidewalk is far better than anything Hollywood produces of late.

    • @daedae1522
      @daedae1522 Рік тому

      @@mjrv5719 How many war films do you need on the same war ?

  • @candydonnelly7543
    @candydonnelly7543 Рік тому +7

    My grandfather was an American Doctor, who was assigned to open all the French Field Hospitals in WW I. I have his discharge papers. He fell in love with a French field nurse, her parents refused their marriage, she died in his arms from typhoid. He never talked about his life experiences, never showed any emotion to his grandchildren. He was a true hero, but emotionally died in France. Peace and Light to your spirit Dr. Norman James Quinn, Sr. You are finally reunited with Marianne❤️🇫🇷❤️

  • @nicholasjames8272
    @nicholasjames8272 5 років тому +216

    My Great Grandfather was a Medic in WW1, Australian like me so he was an ANZAC he fought in Gallipoli against the Ottoman empire. He lived thankfully. I have massive respect for all the soldiers in WW1. Regardless of the country

    • @parasiter6clashroyale741
      @parasiter6clashroyale741 5 років тому +2

      ITSYAGOLDFISHGEROLD My great grandfather fought in the Meuse-Argonne offensive in WW1 for the German side.

    • @parasiter6clashroyale741
      @parasiter6clashroyale741 5 років тому

      Clear Sky Yeah lol.I think he only fought in Europe though.

    • @ZeitgeistGaming69
      @ZeitgeistGaming69 4 роки тому +2

      That same battle is in BF1. They tricked the Ottomans by setting up rifles that would shoot automatically using a pully system. Then, the ANZACs were able to evacuate.

    • @kylesweeney929
      @kylesweeney929 4 роки тому +1

      straya

    • @malstewart6718
      @malstewart6718 4 роки тому +2

      I lost 2 great uncles at Gallipoli, maybe they met each other one in the 10th and one in the 13th battalions

  • @Rockarollas
    @Rockarollas 4 роки тому +119

    My grand-grand father was in the Italian Army during WW1. He was shoot twice at the legs near river Piave. He recovered well. He had great respect of any soldier regardless country.

    • @jendavinci3521
      @jendavinci3521 2 роки тому +3

      My grand-grand father was in WW1 too, but he was fighting for the Austria - Hungary Empire. I am from Czechia and we in the family still do not like all Germans. They started both wars and now the new one is rising by migration, but it is different story... He was very hungry, because the Czechs was always underated by Austrians, so they did not give him and his friends any foods. So he grabbed his unit and went to the Italian farmers to beg for food. Italian farmers were scared and wanted to help their troops, so they gave the bread from ergot. He and his friends never grew old, they are still sleeping near river Piave.

    • @HEINRICH000
      @HEINRICH000 2 роки тому +2

      @@jendavinci3521 how do you say Germany starts the world war 1? The Serbs did. I know Germany starts world war 2, but 1? Nah.

    • @offensivediscourse8514
      @offensivediscourse8514 Рік тому +2

      @@HEINRICH000 Germany supported Austria-Hunary's completely unreasonable ultimatum to Serbia, most points of which they had actually accepted! Without this support, there woild have been nonultimarum and no war.
      Serbia isn't responsible for a terrorist act in its country and certainly not deserving of a war.

    • @arslongavitabrevis5136
      @arslongavitabrevis5136 Рік тому

      @@HEINRICH000Burgund You are right. It is incredible how many idiots keep repeating the lies invented by the Allies in 1918

    • @pgroove163
      @pgroove163 Рік тому +2

      my grandfather immigrated from northern italy to America as a young teen..he fought for the US army .wounded on the front lines at 18yrs old..agree..respect regardless of country and amen

  • @Felix-zb5zj
    @Felix-zb5zj 4 роки тому +67

    My great great grandfather fought in the Somme on the first day but did not survive but made a french friend who was called Sinclair . Every one of my family who has been born has been called Sinclair including me. But this film is amazing

    • @timthegunguy47
      @timthegunguy47 4 роки тому +5

      Cool story. Too bad he didn't make it back home. Respect.

    • @dot__8216
      @dot__8216 4 роки тому +8

      my great grandad was in paschendale and his french brother was also in verdun. the french brother went over to find him but all he found was his body. he wrote home to my grandad who showd me the letters and it was really moving

    • @ludmilamanni8980
      @ludmilamanni8980 4 роки тому +1

      ​@@dot__8216 sad stories from both of you, must been hard, sorry they didnt make it.

    • @dot__8216
      @dot__8216 4 роки тому +1

      @@ludmilamanni8980 thank you 🙏🙏🙏🙏

    • @coderr_
      @coderr_ 3 роки тому +1

      @@dot__8216 My Great Great Uncle was in ww1 as a american soilder and has medals

  • @stephenpowstinger733
    @stephenpowstinger733 5 років тому +713

    Good job recreating the trenches. I was in Vietnam where we actually defended some fire bases with trenches. They weren’t as deep as the WWI variant. Usually they were muddy, especially in clay soils. In many ways WWI was the worst war ever for soldiers but Vietnam was no picnic.

    • @williamw9120
      @williamw9120 5 років тому +58

      Thank you for your service and sacrifice.

    • @stephenpowstinger733
      @stephenpowstinger733 5 років тому +33

      Sergeant by the end of my tour. My unit operated first near Danang, then Bong son, Kontum, Dak To, and finally the Ia Drang Valley.

    • @themobsprinter
      @themobsprinter 5 років тому +15

      Stephen Powzinger You were at Ia Drang? Can't imagine how unpleasant that'd be. Glad to see you made it through.

    • @xxxxxx5868
      @xxxxxx5868 5 років тому +6

      No way. Vietnam was way worse then WW1 and WW2 (in my opinion atleast, i'd like to know a veteran's opinion if you don't mind)

    • @loraxdonbison7475
      @loraxdonbison7475 5 років тому +45

      @@xxxxxx5868 Every war is the worst

  • @spooksparanormalsociety4034
    @spooksparanormalsociety4034 5 років тому +289

    I am a re-enactor, and also a Film Extra with a large Agency. What I see here is actually a damn good representation of a `slice` of trench life from WW1 done on a low budget, with limited actors. Its not the how many, but what one can do with the how few, and i have to hand it to you, you did a good job. You found ways to overcome barriers to deliver the film. Well done.

    • @trench_raider8247
      @trench_raider8247 5 років тому

      Wow I actually plan to become a reenactor myself. For the civil war.

    • @Ethan-mp7wr
      @Ethan-mp7wr 5 років тому

      @@trench_raider8247
      Do it. Sounds pretty cool tbh

  • @johnthefinn
    @johnthefinn 3 роки тому +16

    If this was a student work, I expect to see great things from the students in years to come. Thank you for giving me a moment with the grandfather I never knew, who was wounded twice in what was then called the Great War.

  • @liltoaster7308
    @liltoaster7308 5 років тому +585

    Just saying, the German soldier who looked so weird at the end symbolized the grim reaper sort of.

    • @MendelFilms
      @MendelFilms  5 років тому +152

      That was actually intended. He is the grim reaper. The ending is MacDonald's entry into the afterlife.

    • @MetalMouse67
      @MetalMouse67 5 років тому +57

      That, or a black metal singer. 😄

    • @15098D
      @15098D 5 років тому +27

      I thought it was a dead German but now they both had something in common, being dead

    • @theDUKE25-yt
      @theDUKE25-yt 5 років тому +2

      @@15098D that is what I thought

    • @silvesterwisnu1865
      @silvesterwisnu1865 5 років тому +2

      @@15098D aggre with that

  • @hiukas.
    @hiukas. 5 років тому +828

    It's been 100 year's since ww1 ended.
    Sadly, I'm not sure if i can say that we've learned much from the past.

  • @guile98s
    @guile98s 4 роки тому +24

    the dead German at the end:
    "come! we are peace here"

  • @manofbeard
    @manofbeard 4 роки тому +29

    This is the history that should now and always be taught in schools in the uk. These young men and the sacrifices they made are far to easily overlooked by today’s millennial generation. Lest we forget, who will be left to honour the memories of the young and the brave. May they all rest in eternal peace.

    • @peacenow42
      @peacenow42 Рік тому +1

      name calling like 'boomer' or 'millennial' has got to stop

    • @mantirig4139
      @mantirig4139 Рік тому

      We dont learn from history so it repeats itself over and over, just maybe one day we will learn but not holding my breath!

  • @kellymcgee8456
    @kellymcgee8456 5 років тому +465

    Actually, you did remarkably well for such a small budget, excellent student film. The trench boarding was realistic, the grittiness of the trench scenes were realistic. The rifles were not a major issue in my opinion, you found a practical solution to avoid a costly purchase of Enfield's, a costly rifle these days. The use of blood spatter without the need to show the round impact was excellent. Keep working, I think you have talent for this.

    • @swaviddenson5623
      @swaviddenson5623 5 років тому +9

      Kelly McGee the US used the m1903 30 caliber Springfield rifle, which is accurately depicted in the film

    • @shunpikerdude3934
      @shunpikerdude3934 5 років тому +7

      @@swaviddenson5623 Actually, they were issued both. But with the higher amount of US M1917s and lack of 1903 Springfields to outfit the AEF, more US military personnel actually were issued and used the US M1917 rifles.

    • @robertsimon2881
      @robertsimon2881 5 років тому

      @@shunpikerdude3934 this is 1918. By then 1903s were being used.

    • @shunpikerdude3934
      @shunpikerdude3934 5 років тому +2

      @@robertsimon2881 No, even in 1918 the amount of US M1917s was still greater, it wasn't until after the war that they decided they were not going to adopt them and stuck with the M1903 for their standard issue rifle. After that most of the M1917s got put in storage or were sold off as surplus to civilians and foreign militaries. They did still use M1903's at the same time as the M1917, but the odds are that if you were a US soldier during WW1 you were more than likely carrying a M1917.

    • @neile2001
      @neile2001 5 років тому +4

      People who get hung on equipment accuracy more often than not miss the whole point of the films they criticize.

  • @MrBerserkinTime
    @MrBerserkinTime 5 років тому +601

    I'm glad this was in my recommended

  • @ericlynch9560
    @ericlynch9560 4 роки тому +4

    @MendelFilms, as a veteran (not WW1), I think this is an outstanding film you've made given the financial constraints. Heck, it's an outstanding film, period. When the young soldier walked through the trench and saw his dead buddies he shared a smoke with just a few minutes earlier, I was feeling it. As a veteran, this film moved me. Bravo. Can't wait to see more of your work.

  • @N.Z67
    @N.Z67 3 роки тому +22

    Reminds me of the ending of the first mission in Battlefield 1. They push, we push.

  • @muhummadalsaddique8293
    @muhummadalsaddique8293 5 років тому +168

    The end shows how no matter what uniform your wearing were still the human species staring at the mist waiting for all of it to be over

  • @jamesmortondirtbiking7721
    @jamesmortondirtbiking7721 5 років тому +151

    My great Granda fought in ww2 he got shot in the neck and it came out his shoulder he survived but I sadly never met him ,thank you Granda I hope I meet you in the future .

    • @coderr_
      @coderr_ 3 роки тому +1

      Same my great grandpa he was in ww2 and his brother did in a battle

    • @casers623
      @casers623 3 роки тому +2

      my great granada fought in wwii

    • @etwa8206
      @etwa8206 3 роки тому

      @@casers623 my great grandpa was an American pilot and got stabbed by a Japanese guy luckily he lived and met my great grandma as his nurse

    • @casers623
      @casers623 3 роки тому

      cool

    • @lighterallytypically3507
      @lighterallytypically3507 3 роки тому

      My great great great great grandpa dwayne johnson wrestles germans in ww2 instead of wwe

  • @nicholascarson9924
    @nicholascarson9924 4 роки тому +1

    This 75 year old had both his Grandfathers in this war. One on the English side while the other fought for his country Germany. From tales they told and my own reading this was an excellent portrayal of trench warfare. Well done.

  • @mm.7053
    @mm.7053 4 роки тому +9

    The German soldier representing death at the end just remind me of Alan Seeger’s poem, “ I have a rendevouz with death”, specifically the verses : “and maybe he shaw take my hand and lead me into his dark land...”. By the way, great job bro! Keep the grind 💪🏼, independent cinema, that’s a hard art to play, that’s why it’s GOOD!

  • @hammercanttouchthis
    @hammercanttouchthis 5 років тому +55

    'Either way if I do or don't make it out, I'll still be stuck in this trench'. I'm sure every person that did make it out still had a part of them stuck there. It was God awful.
    Respect to all of those who bravely served in what was perhaps the world's worst conflict. Salutations🌤️

    • @yuurichito1439
      @yuurichito1439 4 роки тому

      Yeah

    • @yuurichito1439
      @yuurichito1439 4 роки тому +2

      Imagine your trench got raided and before you get injured (but survives) you see a german like (the here presented death) but in normal and after the war you have nightmares about a face like 10:20

  • @fiachraswaz
    @fiachraswaz 5 років тому +32

    Grim reaper really rocking that 1980s new romantic/cure look

  • @usmc-veteran7316
    @usmc-veteran7316 3 роки тому +2

    Thank you for this short film. I knew a World War One veteran, who was in combat. Thank You R. W. Clay from South Charleston, West Virginia, a true American Hero.

  • @jonathan45278
    @jonathan45278 Рік тому +4

    You should be very proud of your film. I got lost in it while watching it and also emotionally involved. That is quite an achievement for a short film. Thank you for making such a beautiful film.

  • @SLYGARR
    @SLYGARR 5 років тому +84

    Quite excellent. People who have never made a film do not know how much blood sweat and tears goes into the process. People who focus on cigarette filters and correct gas masks are missing the point. Pointing out n it picky details is not criticism. Great effort and hope you keep it up.

    • @KFace-qm7kx
      @KFace-qm7kx 5 років тому +1

      I appreciate the fill and the detail criticism

    • @michaelphilipp5192
      @michaelphilipp5192 5 років тому

      I suppose you mean me. Well, to be honest, I have done 5 short films - most of them with a historical background - and one feature, so I do know what sweat, blood and tears go into the whole thing. If you didn't mean me, I take it back. And I agree, its a great effort. It is.

  • @Uromastyxfanatics
    @Uromastyxfanatics 5 років тому +8

    Damnnn, that was great. I really liked how in the Roman soldier story, some of the soldiers would walk away to meet death "formally", and then at the end the American soldier shook death's hand. Blew my mind

  • @somewhitedude01
    @somewhitedude01 3 роки тому +14

    This is a real tear jerker.
    And then you read some of the comments.....
    This was a great short film!

  • @peekeyeseek
    @peekeyeseek 4 роки тому +34

    We should all be living in fear of this happening again.

    • @jollygood9183
      @jollygood9183 4 роки тому +1

      I think the Germans have learnt their lesson.

    • @ushoys
      @ushoys 4 роки тому +4

      There's no fear of this ever happening again. The fear is of the next big war that will kill all humanity in a very short time

    • @vice-admiralhorationelson7137
      @vice-admiralhorationelson7137 4 роки тому +7

      Jolly Good Germany didn’t start it

    • @afroartist1086
      @afroartist1086 3 роки тому

      @@ushoys WW3 gone nuclear is actually highly unlikely. The world leaders are relentless but not so diabolical that they'd destroy the world to win.

    • @ushoys
      @ushoys 3 роки тому

      Afro Artist You are wrong. Humanity has never before refrained from doing things it is capable of for very long. Our self-destruction by nuclear weapons is almost guaranteed. The only question is how soon.

  • @jimhill4510
    @jimhill4510 5 років тому +83

    The acting and special effects are believable. Trench warfare was such a waste. Both sides eventually invented ways to defeat the protection that the trench afforded. The mass charges against machine guns were futility at its most gruesome.

    • @DreamandaBackpack
      @DreamandaBackpack 5 років тому

      the acting not really.

    • @nigeh5326
      @nigeh5326 5 років тому +1

      War since the Crimean War of the 1850s on is about technology. In WW1 the technology used by defenders was ahead. But towards the end offensive technology was coming to the fore eg tanks and aircraft this led to the possibilities exploited in WW2 blitzkrieg destroying the enemies cities from the air etc.
      The side with the most advanced technology and the means to mass produce that technology wins.

    • @stross4484
      @stross4484 5 років тому

      Wrong type of helmet on the German side. Stalhhelms weren't invented until 1933.

    • @sumguy1726
      @sumguy1726 4 роки тому

      @@stross4484 1916 I think you will find

  • @kaiservilhelm8371
    @kaiservilhelm8371 5 років тому +45

    O MY GOSH, THIS WAS AMAZING. I NEED MORE OF THIS; CORRECTION, EVERYONE NEEDS MORE OF THIS.

  • @karenmendelson2503
    @karenmendelson2503 3 роки тому +4

    I think I watched about 10 times already..Very powerful and very well made Tyler. So realistic! great job! I am just so proud of you. I love you.

  • @JohnnySquog
    @JohnnySquog Рік тому +1

    I really like seeing people making War Films that teach us something or films which is good

  • @randomsu25noises911
    @randomsu25noises911 5 років тому +282

    The German soldier at the end is death

    • @MendelFilms
      @MendelFilms  5 років тому +14

      correct!

    • @WelfareDude
      @WelfareDude 5 років тому +8

      @ That's the silliest thing I've ever read.

    • @toddrudy1930
      @toddrudy1930 5 років тому

      OK, so explain why DEATH has one uniform over another.

    • @WelfareDude
      @WelfareDude 5 років тому

      jesse wyrick gamer Because he is. No country was nice and innocent. Theres nothing nice about it.

    • @comeoncarl5616
      @comeoncarl5616 5 років тому +3

      Todd Rudy Because the Germans were the perceived enemy to MacDonald, same with the Roman Legionaries and the Huns, I’m sure if the sides were swapped a German soldier would meet death in the form of his enemy on no mans land

  • @stupidgamer7271
    @stupidgamer7271 5 років тому +332

    better than the Hollywood shit

    • @houndpaws2311
      @houndpaws2311 5 років тому +12

      YEP, no shit. That's because Hollywood makes bad movies with tired plot, unnecessary themes, and money grabbing writing.

    • @stupidgamer7271
      @stupidgamer7271 5 років тому

      Hound Paws yep 👍

    • @LeCretin
      @LeCretin 5 років тому +2

      Hollywood is a disgrace

    • @houndpaws2311
      @houndpaws2311 5 років тому +1

      @@LeCretin Damn right they are.

  • @kevvdogg1331
    @kevvdogg1331 4 роки тому +17

    I had tears running down my face towards the end. Especially when The German held hands with the American Soldier

  • @rebdomine1
    @rebdomine1 5 місяців тому

    "I'm always going to be in this trench" wow what a powerful line. I can't imagine what a burden a lifetime of PTSD is to carry. Thank you for this project, I'm sorry to hear those reinactors didn't turn up, this was still very well done. Look at any feature film RedLetterMedia has put out, their behind the scenes comments make it sound like any film project is an absolute nightmare from start to finish.

  • @TheArchitectism
    @TheArchitectism 5 років тому +40

    "Friend and foe will meet again
    Those who died at Paschendale"
    Paschendale by Iron Maiden

  • @theabstractchicken3998
    @theabstractchicken3998 5 років тому +18

    This film is EXTREMELY underrated. Although I do have my critques, I thoroughly enjoyed this film. Keep up the good work!

    • @MendelFilms
      @MendelFilms  5 років тому +1

      Thank you! I'd be more than happy to listen to your critiques! Thanks for the kind words!

  • @CTXVII
    @CTXVII 3 роки тому +3

    I love that the one guy telling the other soldiers about the Romans and Attila, it’s cool that he’s comparing their current situation to their forefathers situation that was not much different if you think about it

  • @Godyjail1
    @Godyjail1 6 місяців тому

    My great grandfather was a German stormtrooper, (sturmtrupen). When he was given his new helmet, (stahlhelm, after the picklehauble,) a French bullet hit him right in the forehead. That helmet saved his life. It’s disgusting the way people look at him. He was a hero. Not all Germans were evil. RIP Heinrich Agnew III

  • @williamjohnson2878
    @williamjohnson2878 5 років тому +87

    Incredible film, really hits hard

    • @moshemoreno4009
      @moshemoreno4009 4 роки тому +1

      This comment has 69 likes

    • @canadianbacon2693
      @canadianbacon2693 4 роки тому

      @@moshemoreno4009 that's so great I'm so glad you shared that with us

  • @sevensixtwomm
    @sevensixtwomm 5 років тому +18

    Excellent! Great to see small independent films of this quality. Well done!

  • @SRN1850AN
    @SRN1850AN 3 роки тому +2

    Thank you for your film. Well done, and please keep at it. I hope I live long enough to see one of your films open on the big screen.

  • @bandlandmusic8543
    @bandlandmusic8543 5 років тому +9

    this was absolutely amazing, well done and a great tribute to our heros.

  • @MendelFilms
    @MendelFilms  5 років тому +58

    Hi guys! I'm starting to see a larger influx of viewers and I'd love to know where you're all coming from/finding the film! And I also love to read the comments and feedback from you all!

    • @johnmead2781
      @johnmead2781 5 років тому +1

      MendelFilms Missouri, USA

    • @maximlewk628
      @maximlewk628 5 років тому +1

      Niedersachsen, Germany

    • @haydenhancock4739
      @haydenhancock4739 5 років тому +1

      Missouri, United States.

    • @Joker201278
      @Joker201278 5 років тому +2

      I'm from Germany and I got here by suggestion from UA-cam. But what I really want so say is...WOW! This is an amazing work and really great looking movie! Excellent! I would really like to get more information about the production, you and your team and so on. This looks & feels professionel... 😊

    • @MendelFilms
      @MendelFilms  5 років тому +3

      Danke! If you'd like, I posted a lot of bonus features on my vimeo account such as bloopers, the making of, commentary, etc! www.vimeo.com/tylermendelson

  • @rentabullet4048
    @rentabullet4048 5 років тому +91

    Grandfather of my grandfather fought for ottoman empire in ww1 he captured by russians in the sarikamish offensive he came back after bolshevik revulation

    • @caractaco
      @caractaco 5 років тому +3

      Good for him and for you, brother.

    • @haikat4
      @haikat4 4 роки тому

      genocidal baby killer he was

  • @hisss
    @hisss 5 років тому +2

    Absolutely horrifying, gut-wrenching. The ending made me go numb for a few moments... Very well done.

  • @mikemasiello9625
    @mikemasiello9625 3 роки тому +1

    My Grandfather was in the Italian Army during WWI. He fought against the Austrians in the Alps during the war. He was a very kind and happy man. He never talked about the war but I remember he showed us where he got shot, in the pinkie and the calf. I wonder now if he was so happy because he survived the war. I also think I am fortunate to be here today. A little better aim or a little less luck on that battle field so long ago and I would not be typing this right now. Your short film was great I enjoyed it very much. More of a story in less than 15 minutes than most full length pictures. Thank You.

    • @arminius301
      @arminius301 Рік тому

      Not sure how your italian grandfather was fighting Austrians. Austria, Germany and Italy were allies in WW1.

  • @john.thomas21
    @john.thomas21 5 років тому +14

    Good film, I like the minimalist style and the direction you went with the Hun. The song at the end was absolutely fantastic as well.

  • @IXINOSIS
    @IXINOSIS 5 років тому +71

    This was a great short film, but I didn't see any Eurasian steppe nomads pillaging villages.

    • @MendelFilms
      @MendelFilms  5 років тому +25

      The Hun was a nickname of the Germans in World War I!

    • @IXINOSIS
      @IXINOSIS 5 років тому +18

      I knew that. I was just being silly (:

    • @MendelFilms
      @MendelFilms  5 років тому +22

      You never know in the comments section on youtube haha :)

    • @buddhastaxi666
      @buddhastaxi666 4 роки тому +2

      Eastern Front...Turks and Hungarians... Magyars. The reference to Hun started early in British propaganda. There were genuine war crimes in Belgium, by German troops, which the British documented officially and factually.

    • @lesterpaul9657
      @lesterpaul9657 4 роки тому

      @@buddhastaxi666 Its not quite right.
      German emperor Wilhelm II was to blame for that hate name.
      In his speech against the Boxer uprising in china he said something like "we will come over you just like hun and we will never give no quarter."
      This was the famous hun speech another prove that Wilhelm was a bad dumbass.
      Of course the british used it later on for propaganda matters and the US gov't as well.
      Btw. I' m german.

  • @Dirtywesterner
    @Dirtywesterner Рік тому

    I’m stunned by this one,it’s brilliant and the best thing about it is the way the end came about like it did

  • @jacknagel9387
    @jacknagel9387 4 роки тому +2

    Can we take a moment to say how amazing the music is here? Like anyone can make music sure, but every song especially "Dear Dove" was amazing. This movie really pushed the boundaries with everything.

  • @markelmer9822
    @markelmer9822 5 років тому +6

    Watching the film again ; I found the ending just got better with each viewing (I kept rewinding many times) without wishing to state the obvious, its Gothic horror aesthetic was very captivating - the almost giant German reaper taking the dead soldier’s hand with a sensitivity and compassion; an excellent scene and a conclusion to a film that I will always remember 👍

  • @samuelstoner5651
    @samuelstoner5651 5 років тому +16

    This is a beautiful film, and so sad. I wouldn't recognize historical accuracy if I saw it, and for me the props were beside the point. The story you told is spellbinding.

    • @Gotobar
      @Gotobar 5 років тому +5

      Samuel Stoner As a Historian, I really didn’t see too much wrong with it, it was a spectacular short film.

  • @kevmac1230
    @kevmac1230 4 роки тому +1

    Very good.I've always been captivated about the immense human drama that is W.W.1.Ever since I met Mr.Smith a Welsh Army vet that told me stories of his 4 yrs in the trenches on the Western Front,I have studied all I could find on the subject.I was a very young boy and we somehow formed a bond and he said he'd never spoke of these things to anyone and I've always felt honored by this.Though gone for almost 50 years now I think of him to this day.

  • @osborn.illustration
    @osborn.illustration Рік тому +12

    My great grandfather was a corporal at the Battle of the Somme. This was a very poignant ending with the ghost of another teenage boy showing up to walk with our main character to the afterlife.

  • @JamesJohnson-lg9uq
    @JamesJohnson-lg9uq 4 роки тому +1

    Considering the limitations and budget restraints as you explained, this was a great short film. Keep up the good work!

  • @streetgato9697
    @streetgato9697 5 років тому +23

    Excellent work overall.
    Don't mind the rivet-counters and nitpickers- they come with the territory.
    You worked with the budget and resources available and produced a decent work.
    Congratulations!

  • @filmsbydiek7316
    @filmsbydiek7316 5 років тому +5

    Great job! Read your pinned comment, as an indiefilmmaker I'm with you all the way on the budget and details. The average viewer has no clue how challenging biting off a "real" movie is, much less a period piece, and war film too! Great work. Of course there's always more to learn and things to look back on. Bravo!

  • @kenkubaska8574
    @kenkubaska8574 5 років тому

    Great short film that encapsulates the futility, fear and courage those young men faced. Thank you

  • @chriscooolier1479
    @chriscooolier1479 5 років тому

    Hollywood union prop person here. Shoutout to whomever made the breech loader mechanism on the cannon. Took me a while to figure it out. Genius. Bravo.
    Great short film as well.

  • @adamsolymosi1276
    @adamsolymosi1276 5 років тому +4

    I am Hungarian and when the guy was talking about how the romans were so scared of them I felt bad but also felt really good to be Hungarian.

  • @arianmartic7965
    @arianmartic7965 5 років тому +38

    "War that will end all war", sadly it wasnt. 😞

    • @Mike-im5bo
      @Mike-im5bo 5 років тому +10

      The "winners" were too concerned with winning the war, but not the peace

    • @yoyoyeah9083
      @yoyoyeah9083 5 років тому +2

      Arian Martic yea ikr it wouldn't be fun without wars

    • @itsyaboijack229
      @itsyaboijack229 5 років тому +5

      You can’t end human nature

    • @arianmartic7965
      @arianmartic7965 5 років тому +2

      @@yoyoyeah9083 😂

    • @arianmartic7965
      @arianmartic7965 5 років тому +3

      @@itsyaboijack229 true

  • @marcnedboy3163
    @marcnedboy3163 5 місяців тому +1

    My Grandfather Cpl.David Posner 42nd Infantry Div. was gassed in the Argonne Forest.Died Fathers Day 1964 in the BROOKLYN VETERANS HOSPITAL.I was 6.Hope to see him in the next…

  • @buddhastaxi666
    @buddhastaxi666 4 роки тому +1

    I had at least 2 relatives in WW1.... One at Gallipolli and the other at Vimy Ridge. Two brothers one with 7th batt Royal Welsh Fusiliers and the other with Canadian Army. Before the war they had left Wales near the Shropshire border to farm in Alberta Canada. They joined up. Both survived , with my direct great grandfather in the Terriotorials until he died , relatively young at 52. He was a CSM. He believed the conflict had a meaning. We know in retrospect that if it had lasted only until the first Christmas, just after the Germans lost the First battle of the Marne, it would have served a purpose. Considering it perversly degenerated into a war of attrition then the war was without a positive outcome. The war instead has left a nightmare in our collective memory, some of us still feel the destruction as if we had been there in another life, so vivid were the memories of the veterans and civilians, my living relatives when I was a child, so obvious the physical loss and impact on society.

  • @BeatBodega
    @BeatBodega 5 років тому +9

    The sound in this shortfilm is almost perfect

  • @daniellee6451
    @daniellee6451 5 років тому +9

    Props to you, this was absolutely amazing!

  • @rdf0558
    @rdf0558 4 роки тому

    I'm Brazilian, I have read much about Poland, mainly on WWII and communism period. In 2016 I went to Krakow and saw a beautiful city and talked to many people. Great country, great people! Congratulations!

    • @rdf0558
      @rdf0558 4 роки тому

      And, of course, amazing movie!

  • @sammybarrios4053
    @sammybarrios4053 3 роки тому +2

    THE BEST I HAVE SEEN! I cried a lot. nowadays nobody cares for those who have fought for us. all so young.

  • @truthspeaks1265
    @truthspeaks1265 5 років тому +37

    Near hollywood quality, well done!

  • @azoutdoors2344
    @azoutdoors2344 5 років тому +9

    Very good film and I enjoyed it. Thank you for posting.

  • @redthepost
    @redthepost 3 роки тому +1

    Gutsy work. Your work made me feel the loss, the inner panic, the numbness of it all. You are an artist.

  • @davidpetrie8261
    @davidpetrie8261 3 роки тому

    such an interesting take on battlefield trauma and the loss of so many..the end was very well conceived

  • @AZrakoon
    @AZrakoon 5 років тому +39

    Great film.....one thing that is not mentioned in any ww1 films, that really did happen is the moral dilema soldiers had when killing german soldiers.....there was a lot of struggle for the militaries of the allied side, i believe German as well, at the time......i wish more war pictures are lile yours, where war is shown for its ugly truth...not some romantized version, Hollywood tends to make to appease the masses

    • @hauuagdbhshg3604
      @hauuagdbhshg3604 5 років тому +4

      1933 "All quiet on the Western Front", enjoy yourself.
      Btw, this short movie looks like really short retelling of the book, which that 1933 film is based on. I mean, reeeeally short.

  • @queenslandbushnut7645
    @queenslandbushnut7645 5 років тому +4

    Rip to all the lads that died .
    NO MORE BROTHER WARS

  • @eugeneflynn7435
    @eugeneflynn7435 4 роки тому +3

    I’ve been binging WWI films, and this popped up. I thought it was excellent, then read your comment that it’s a “student film” with a limited budget and a bad case of no-shows from your re-enactors. That all blew my mind. I instantly subscribed and look forward to viewing more of your work. Top notch! (Also, the relatively few negative comments I’ve seen are baseless, petty, and should be disregarded. These people really do live under bridges and in basements.)

  • @cindyyourplanet3691
    @cindyyourplanet3691 4 роки тому

    You did your best; and they SO did their best. RIP to all the fine young dead that died for us. And thank you.

  • @thudor1
    @thudor1 5 років тому +31

    I'm from New Jersey and I can't believe this happened 100 years ago!

    • @eddiecaplan1908
      @eddiecaplan1908 5 років тому +1

      It was started by the irish😀, all that nonsense about a so called^potato famine^??, all lies, they just forgot where they buried them😀

    • @CrossOfBayonne
      @CrossOfBayonne 5 років тому

      Me too there are a lot of WW1 memorials in my area

  • @cptstelios113
    @cptstelios113 5 років тому +5

    The ending song is soooo epic.... the music, the lyrics, the voice of the singer!! GOOD JOB

    • @MendelFilms
      @MendelFilms  5 років тому +2

      Thank you! It is based on a poem I wrote and composed by my friend Pat Swanson, he is quite brilliant! It is available for purchase if you are interested in owning it (see the pinned post for more details.)

    • @cptstelios113
      @cptstelios113 5 років тому +1

      @@MendelFilms I know my friend I read the comment you left in which you explained everything about this project. I clicked on the link just to listen to the song one more time. So sad that's not free.I am stuck on it maybe in the future I will purchase it. Thank you UA-cam for your recommendation.😂

  • @nigden1
    @nigden1 3 роки тому +18

    Brilliant film mate, I’m from England, and must have seen every WW1 film made, this is poignant and compelling.

    • @MendelFilms
      @MendelFilms  3 роки тому +2

      Cheers mate!

    • @coderr_
      @coderr_ 3 роки тому

      Hey mate my great grandmother uncle fought in ww1

  • @LanceRomanceF4E
    @LanceRomanceF4E 7 місяців тому

    My grandfather fought with Company M, 16th Infantry, 1st Division in two major offensives - Meuse Argonne and St Mihiel, was wounded was twice and cited for gallant conduct with a Silver Starts, two Purple Hearts and good conduct medal. He was most proud of the good conduct medal as it was the hardest to earn. He received his American citizenship as a WWI veteran and worked in WV coal mines for the next 40 yrs. His Italian work ethic produced nine successful children who all lived the American dream. I’m his oldest grandson, retired Lt Colonel, proud of our family service. RiP grandad.

  • @Richard44077
    @Richard44077 5 років тому +5

    Well done. Period films are tough, you did a great job in telling your story.

  • @collinlaper3738
    @collinlaper3738 5 років тому +7

    Quite well done. If you look past the very small inconsistencies, it is a poignant reminder of the tragedy and futility of war. Humans killing other humans, orchestrated by those that will never see the battlefield

  • @justice4all72
    @justice4all72 4 роки тому

    Excellent job! Captured the period perfectly and the boys did a great job. Thank you!!

  • @terrenceswanson944
    @terrenceswanson944 Рік тому

    My grandfather served during WW1 in USArmy artillery in France. He was gased and sent home then died of pneumonia as a result of his injuries. Never got to meet him. He was a Swedish immigrant and as soon as he recieved his citizenship off to France he went.